
Several Circles by Wassily Kandinsky Exhibition
Painted in 1926 during Kandinsky's Bauhaus years, Several Circles arranges luminous discs of varying sizes across a near-black ground — each circle distinct yet in dialogue with its neighbours, overlapping and layering to create a composition of extraordinary stillness and cosmic depth. The palette moves from pale gold to deep violet, from transparent blue to opaque white. Kandinsky believed the circle was the most restrained form, yet the most dynamic — and here, its repetition becomes meditative, almost musical in its spacing and rhythm.
The dark ground and radiant colour fields of this canvas print find their richest expression on woven cotton. The surface lends warmth and depth to the glowing circles, making this canvas art print feel genuinely luminous when hung and lit.
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Several Circles by Wassily Kandinsky Exhibition
Painted in 1926 during Kandinsky's Bauhaus years, Several Circles arranges luminous discs of varying sizes across a near-black ground — each circle distinct yet in dialogue with its neighbours, overlapping and layering to create a composition of extraordinary stillness and cosmic depth. The palette moves from pale gold to deep violet, from transparent blue to opaque white. Kandinsky believed the circle was the most restrained form, yet the most dynamic — and here, its repetition becomes meditative, almost musical in its spacing and rhythm.
The dark ground and radiant colour fields of this canvas print find their richest expression on woven cotton. The surface lends warmth and depth to the glowing circles, making this canvas art print feel genuinely luminous when hung and lit.
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Painted in 1926 during Kandinsky's Bauhaus years, Several Circles arranges luminous discs of varying sizes across a near-black ground — each circle distinct yet in dialogue with its neighbours, overlapping and layering to create a composition of extraordinary stillness and cosmic depth. The palette moves from pale gold to deep violet, from transparent blue to opaque white. Kandinsky believed the circle was the most restrained form, yet the most dynamic — and here, its repetition becomes meditative, almost musical in its spacing and rhythm.
The dark ground and radiant colour fields of this canvas print find their richest expression on woven cotton. The surface lends warmth and depth to the glowing circles, making this canvas art print feel genuinely luminous when hung and lit.























